Citizenship in the Arab World IMISCOE International Migration, Integration and Social Cohesion in Europe The IMISCOE Network of Excellence unites over 500 researchers from European institutes specialising in studies of international migration, integration and social cohesion. The Network is funded by the Sixth Framework Programme of the European Commission on Research, Citizens and Governance in a Knowledge-Based Society. Since its foundation in 2004, IMISCOE has developed an integrated, multidisciplinary and globally comparative research project led by scholars from all branches of the economic and social sciences, the humanities and law. The Network both furthers existing studies and pioneers new research in migration as a discipline. Priority is also given to promoting innovative lines of inquiry key to European policymaking and governance. The IMISCOE-Amsterdam University Press Series was created to make the Network’s findings and results available to researchers, policymakers and practitioners, the media and other interested stakeholders. High-quality manuscripts authored by IMISCOE members and cooperating partners are published in one of four distinct series. IMISCOE Research advances sound empirical and theoretical scholarship addressing themes within IMISCOE’s mandated fields of study. IMISCOE Reports disseminates Network papers and presentations of a time-sensitive nature in book form. IMISCOE Dissertations presents select PhD monographs written by IMISCOE doctoral candidates. IMISCOE Textbooks produces manuals, handbooks and other didactic tools for instructors and students of migration studies. IMISCOE Policy Briefs and more information on the Network can be found at www.imiscoe.org. Citizenship in the Arab World Kin, Religion and Nation-State Gianluca P. Parolin IMISCOE Research This work builds on five years of onsite research into citizenship in the Arab world. A grant awarded by the Italian National Research Council (CNR) made the publication of its results possible as Dimensioni del- l’appartenenza e cittadinanza nel mondo arabo by Gianluca P. Parolin, published in Italian by Jovene in 2007 (ISBN 88-243-1720-0). Cover photo: Andrea Locati Cover design: Studio Jan de Boer BNO , Amsterdam Layout: The DocWorkers, Almere ISBN 978 90 8964 045 1 e- ISBN 978 90 4850 629 3 NUR 741 / 763 © Gianluca P. Parolin / Amsterdam University Press, 2009 All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright re- served above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or in- troduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of both the copyright owner and the author of the book. Table of contents Preface by Rainer Baubo ̈ck 9 Foreword by Gerard-Rene ́ de Groot 13 Acknowledgements and Romanisation system 15 Introduction 17 Basic constituents of citizenship 17 Classical models and early East-West contacts 19 Different civilisational paths 21 Arabic terminology 23 Subject, membership and rights in the Arab world 25 1 Membership in the kin group 29 1.1 Representing the social prism 29 1.2 Inclusion by kinship, clientage or slavery 33 Kinship 33 Clientage 34 Slavery 35 1.3 Severance from the group 36 1.4 Customary law 36 1.5 Private justice and arbitration 37 1.6 The chieftain and the assembly 38 2 Membership in the religious community 41 2.1 The formation of the Islamic community 41 2.2 Forms of membership in the Islamic community 47 2.2.1 Muslims 47 2.2.2 Non-Muslims 49 2.3 Partition from the Islamic community 50 2.3.1 Muslim sects 50 2.3.2 Collective apostasy 52 2.3.3 Individual apostasy 55 2.4 Characters of the confessional system 58 2.4.1 Personality of Islamic law 58 2.4.2 Jurisdiction of the Islamic judge 59 2.4.3 Status of non-Muslims in the da ̄r al-isla ̄m 60 2.5 Islam and the kin group 61 2.5.1 Planning newly founded cities 62 2.5.2 Status of non-Arab neo-converts (mawla ‘ s) 62 2.5.3 The principle of wedding adequacy (kafa ̄’ah) 66 2.5.4 Restriction of the caliphate to Quraish kinsmen 67 2.6 Islam and Arabness 67 2.6.1 Koranic prescriptions and early Islam 68 2.6.2 The first Shu c u ̄bı ̄yah 68 2.6.2 Other opposition movements to Arab dominance 69 3 Membership in the nation-state 71 3.1 The emergence of nation-states and nationality 71 3.1.1 Ottoman decline 71 3.1.1.1 Capitulations (imtiya ̄za ̄t) 71 3.1.1.2 Tanzı ̄ma ̄t and Ottoman nationality 73 3.1.1.3 Imperial provinces and indigenous nationality 74 3.1.2 Ottoman dismemberment 75 3.1.3 Peace treaties and nationality of detached territories 76 3.1.4 The French model 77 3.1.5 Independent states and nationality legislation 79 3.1.5.1 Egypt 79 3.1.5.2 Iraq 82 3.1.5.3 Palestine 83 3.1.5.4 Jordan 86 3.1.5.5 Lebanon 87 3.1.5.6 Syria 88 3.1.5.7 Saudi Arabia 88 3.1.5.8 Gulf states 89 3.1.5.9 Yemen 91 3.1.5.10 Sudan 91 3.1.5.11 Libya 91 3.1.5.12 Morocco 92 3.1.5.13 Tunisia 93 3.1.5.14 Algeria 94 3.2 Nationality ( jinsı ̄yah ) in the Arab world 95 3.2.1 Acquisition of nationality 96 3.2.1.1 Attribution of nationality of origin 97 3.2.1.1.1 Jus sanguinis 97 6 CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB WORLD 3.2.1.1.2 Jus sanguinis strengthened by jus soli 99 3.2.1.1.3 Jus soli 99 3.2.1.2 Acquisition of foreign nationality 100 3.2.1.2.1 Naturalisation 101 3.2.1.2.2 Acquisition by marriage – mixed marriages 106 3.2.2 Loss of nationality and its restoration 107 3.2.2.1 Loss due to change 108 3.2.2.2 Loss due to deprivation 109 3.2.2.3 Restoration 110 3.3 Nationality ( jinsı ̄yah ) in the Islamic perspective 112 3.3.1 Attribution 113 3.3.2 Acquisition 113 3.3.3 Loss 114 4 Citizenship and the three levels of membership 115 4.1 Citizenship and the kin group ( status gentis ) 116 4.2 Citizenship and the religious community ( status religio ̄nis ) 118 4.3 Citizenship and the nation-state ( status civitatis ) 122 4.4 Contrasting citizenships: the role of migrations 125 4.5 Patterns of citizenship in the Arab world 127 Notes 131 Glossary of Arabic legal terms 143 Bibliography 153 In Arabic 153 Classics 153 Modern and contemporary works 156 In other languages 163 General index 181 TABLE OF CONTENTS 7 Preface In European traditions of political thought, the concept of citizenship has provided a crucial link between the ideas of democracy and of the rule of law. In a well-known essay, John Pocock identified the Athenian and Roman roots of citizenship as active participation in collective self- rule and as a legal status of freedom within a territorial jurisdiction re- spectively (Pocock 1992: 35-55). With the emergence of the concepts of territorial sovereignty in the 17th century and of the nation-state as the basic unit of a global international order since the end of the 18th cen- tury, citizenship has acquired a third meaning. It is today often used as a synonym for nationality, which refers to a legal bond between indivi- duals and sovereign states. In its external dimension nationality refers to a rule of mutual recognition between states that entails powers to protect their nationals abroad and a duty to readmit them into their ter- ritories. In its internal dimension, nationality does not presuppose de- mocratic participation, but refers to individuals as subjects of a sover- eign political authority independent of the nature of the regime. Since the Age of Enlightenment all three interpretations of citizen- ship have been combined in democratic revolutions and constitutional transformations in Europe and the American colonies established by European settlers. Representative democracy constitutionally con- strained by the rule of law in a sovereign nation-state has become the most widely embraced ideal of legitimate exercise of political authority. As the many dark episodes of authoritarian and totalitarian rule show, this model has not always been successful. Today it faces new chal- lenges by national minorities who claim territorial autonomy, by inter- national migrations that create large populations of non-citizen resi- dents inside state territories and non-resident citizens abroad, and by a broad range of phenomena grouped together under the label of globali- sation that are seen to undermine effective state sovereignty. These developments have triggered a large and still growing new lit- erature on citizenship. This revival of interest in citizenship since the 1980s is multidisciplinary and multidimensional. It has inspired com- parative analyses of nationality laws, feminist political theories and so- ciological studies of citizenship ideals and practices among different groups. Yet there is one pervasive limitation. With very few exceptions this literature is Eurocentric, or more precisely Occidentocentric. Gianluca Parolin’s account of citizenship in the Arab world is a very welcome attempt to fill one of the most significant geographical and historical gaps in the comparative citizenship literature. Drawing exten- sively on original Arabic sources, Parolin tells a story that is much more complex than the stereotypical images of authoritarian regimes governed by Islamic law. In his analysis, citizenship in the Arab world combines elements of pre-Islamic structures of kinship with the ideal of ummah as a religious community and with nation-state sovereignty. Concepts of citizenship derived from these three principles obviously do not correspond, either with regard to territorial scope and inclusion of persons, or with regard to the substantive rights and obligations at- tributed to individuals. This mismatch results in rather unstable legal constructions that can pull in different directions depending on the de- mographic composition of the society in question or the direction ta- ken by a particular regime. Parolin’s account leaves little doubt that citizenship laws in Arabic states are commonly characterised by features considered today as illib- eral by most Western scholars. Among these are the explicit or implicit link between religious belief and acquisition or loss of citizenship sta- tus, the second-class status of naturalised citizens compared with citi- zens by birth, the principle of perpetual allegiance that prohibits re- nunciation of citizenship by emigrants, the denial of citizenship to some minorities that are thereby made stateless, the discrimination of women through the dominance of paternal jus sanguinis and the un- equal treatment of husbands and wives in the acquisition and loss of citizenship through marriage and divorce. None of these features, however, is unique to the Islamic or Arabic world. As historical comparative studies show, each of these illiberal principles has had its equivalent in a not too distant European past, and some traces survive even in the nationality laws of current mem- ber states of the European Union. This should not come as a surprise. First, the imperatives of nation-state building after the break-up of mul- tinational empires created similar problems of minority exclusion from citizenship in the Habsburg, Ottoman, Soviet and Yugoslav cases. Sec- ond, ethnicity and religion have also served as bases for national iden- tity and as obstacles for naturalisation in several European countries and continue to do so today in Greece or Denmark. Third, as Parolin shows, international conventions requiring equal treatment of men and women in nationality law, which has had a major impact on na- tional legislation in Europe since the 1970s, have more recently also triggered reforms in some states of the Arab region. 10 CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB WORLD These parallels show that citizenship in the Arab world is certainly not impervious to internal contestation and external influence. How- ever, the gap between a liberal democratic concept and present legisla- tion in these countries still remains very wide and difficult to bridge. Yet bridged it must be, because in a globalising world, citizenship is no longer a matter under exclusive control of sovereign states. In con- texts of migration the citizenship status of individuals becomes a joint product of legislation in two independent states. The Arab world is of special interest in studying the consequences of migration for citizen- ship because it includes some of the most important sending countries as well as those states with the highest percentages of non-citizen im- migrants in the resident population. Arab sending countries have often tried to exercise political control over their large expatriate populations and to prevent their integration into the receiving society. Yet, eventually, such homeland-driven politi- cal transnationalism may result in reverse pressure being exercised by expatriate communities on the governments of their countries of origin (Brand 2006). Citizenship policies of emigration states also affect those of European countries of immigration. Consider, for example, how a principle of perpetual allegiance interacts with the toleration of dual nationality. Only some Western European states still require that applicants for naturalisation must renounce a previous nationality. Aus- tria, Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands currently grant excep- tions for immigrants from countries that do not permit such renuncia- tion. The perverse effect of this approach is, however, to create a disad- vantage for immigrants from countries with more liberal nationality laws. A more general toleration of dual nationality in Europe would not only avoid such arbitrary discrimination among immigrants, but would also increase pressure on Arab sending states to reconsider the principle of perpetual allegiance. In the Arab world, pressure for liberalising reforms seems to be cur- rently stronger in contexts of emigration than of immigration. In sev- eral of the Arab Gulf states the majority of residents are permanently excluded from citizenship. Citizenship becomes then a minority privi- lege attached to descent, ethnicity and religion as it was in the Athe- nian polis or the late medieval Italian city republics. In Gulf states gov- erned by autocratic regimes whose wealth is wholly derived from oil revenues, migrants who provide a low-status working class and remain socially fully segregated have hardly any political clout to demand ac- cess to citizenship. Yet, as Parolin shows, both Islamic legal concepts pertaining to protected foreigners and modern nationality law may eventually provide some leverage for contesting such exclusionary con- cepts of citizenship. PREFACE 11 Parolin introduces us to a complex body of social, religious and legal norms that have shaped citizenship regimes in the Arab world. It is quite obvious that reconciling these traditions with inclusive and demo- cratic concepts of citizenship is a daunting task. But this challenge is raised by the increasingly dense transnational linkages between Eur- opean and Arab states created through migration, and it has been occa- sionally embraced by reform minded Islamic scholars. As Parolin ar- gues, in the Arab world the transformative dynamic of citizenship dis- course is currently limited by a traditional focus in legal debates on the status of non-Muslims in Muslim countries and the duties of Muslims in non-Muslim societies. What is still missing are broader reflections on the meaning of citizenship that would include all three dimensions of democracy, the rule of law and the collective identity of the political community. Taking Arab and Islamic traditions seriously and studying them as carefully as Parolin does may be the most useful contribution European scholars can make towards such debates. Rainer Baubo ̈ck European University Institute, Florence 12 CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB WORLD Foreword It is a pleasure to welcome the publication of the book Citizenship in the Arab World The complicated relationship between the concepts of ‘nationality’ and ‘citizenship’ has been the subject of many publications in the re- cent past. Their precise relationship depends very much on the lan- guages and legal systems in which these concepts are operating. In sev- eral languages, the term etymologically related to ‘nationality’ has an ethnic dimension and indicates that a certain person belongs to a na- tion in an ethnic sense. On the other hand, the term related to ‘citizen- ship’ indicates inter alia the formal link between a person and a state. In many other languages and legal systems, however, ‘nationality’ re- fers to ‘the legal bond between a person and a state and does not indi- cate the person’s ethnic origin’ (art. 2(a) of the European Convention on Nationality). Thus the term etymologically related to ‘nationality’ is in the latter case more or less a synonym for ‘citizenship’. Often, the discussion on the relationship between nationality and ci- tizenship focuses on different European languages and legal systems with European roots. It is therefore very enriching that Gianluca Paro- lin opens his work with a description of the notions related to citizen- ship in Europe and the Arab world. He considers the roots of the con- cept of citizenship in ancient Greece and classical Rome and then ela- borates on the views on membership in the kin and the religious groups in the Arab world. In such a context, it is extremely interesting to read about the position of non-Muslims – in particular, those belong- ing to Jewish and Christian minorities – in the Arab world until the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. Fascinating is the description of the development of a law of citizenship in the Otto- man Empire at the end of the 19th century, as well as the emergence of a kind of ‘indigenous’ nationality in several Ottoman provinces. Parolin’s description of the development of nationality legislation among the independent Arab states in the 20th and early 21st centu- ries is very informative. He shows the French influence on those na- tionality laws while pointing out their typical Arab features. Despite the fact that states in principle are autonomous in national- ity matters, we are witnessing a growing discussion on the desirability and feasibility of a certain degree of harmonisation with regard to the grounds for acquisition and loss of nationality. That is particularly the case in Europe, where the already mentioned European Convention on Nationality concluded in Strasbourg (1997) creates some common ground in this field. The dream of the drafters is that the Convention may serve as a starting point for a worldwide convention on nationality. This dream was also incorporated into article 23, which allows non- member states – by invitation – to ratify the Convention. In view of a future worldwide discussion on nationality regulations, Parolin’s very detailed comparative description of the grounds for acquisition and loss of nationality in the Arab world is of paramount importance. (With re- gard to the acquisition of nationality, he distinguishes between attribu- tion and acquisition of nationality, in the narrow sense, in line with the French tradition followed by Arab scholars.) I am very happy with this comparison; there is a real need for up-to-date information on the na- tionality laws of the countries in the Arab world. The information on the current situation regarding the nationality laws in the Arab countries will also be very useful to lawyers handling nationality cases involving persons of Arab origin. To this end, Parolin’s volume contains a great deal of important data. The publication of such a book fills an important gap and makes an ex- cellent contribution to the debate. Hopefully, the author will have the occasion to participate in the discussions on the possible harmonisa- tion of some aspects of nationality law, in particular in the Arab world, and to update the information on the developments of these nationality laws from time to time. Gerard-Rene ́ de Groot Maastricht University, Maastricht 14 CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB WORLD Acknowledgements Sincere and special thanks for their precious help to Steven Gallo, Eliana A. Pollone and Therese M. Sciabica. Romanisation system For the romanisation of Arabic, the system adopted in this volume is that used by the Library of Congress. However, for editorial reasons, emphatic letters are assimilated to their corresponding non-emphatic letters and the pharyngeal ‘h’ is assimilated to the glottal ‘h’. The tanwı ̄n is superscript. No prime is used. Introduction Citizenship is one of the key concepts underpinning both the vision and the philosophical basis of modern Western political thought. A broad range of disciplines employ it in a variety of contexts and with quite different connotations. As a result, the suggestive and multifa- ceted notion of citizenship proves hard to unravel, and even harder to define. Identifying the main constituents of the concept, however, is a cru- cial preliminary step for comparative analysis – especially when com- paring systems with fairly different approaches and largely distinct ap- praisals of such a concept. The purpose of capturing the salient fea- tures of citizenship is precisely to transcend the purely descriptive level of definitions and to track their development in the Arab world, thus reaching a deeper understanding of the issues involved. In the quest for a core notion of citizenship, Aristotle’s definition can be viewed as a starting point; both Western and Eastern scholars have used the Aristotelian definition as a basis, at times to refine it, sometimes to extend its scope or even to contest it. Basic constituents of citizenship Investigating the social and political nature of man was the innermost and earliest level of inquiry into the texture of human relations in an- cient philosophy. In this context, Aristotle was the first to bring man to the centre of the stage and to argue that his distinctive character was his being ‘political’ ( politiko ‘n ); human beings, unlike animals or gods, are political by nature ( Politics : 1253a, 2-5). Aristotle opened his treatise on politics with this axiom, thus marking a sharp contrast with the structure of Plato’s theory, whose main political work commenced with the definition of justice ( Republic : 330d). Both authors share a teleologi- cal perspective, essentially believing in the primacy of the polis , but by assuming man as the cornerstone of the discourse Aristotle somehow surpassed and turned Plato’s priority of the polis on its head. Aristotle’s axiom influenced generations of intellectuals both in the East and in the West. Nearly seventeen centuries after Aristotle’s death, the famous Arab Muslim polymath ibn Khaldu ̄n still referred to the opening of the Politics in the Prolegomena to his work on universal his- tory. Ibn Khaldu ̄n employed Aristotle’s opening as the first premise to the discourse on human civilisation ( al- c umra ̄n al-basharı ̄ ): ‘First: so- ciety ( al-ijtima ̄ c al-insa ̄nı ̄ ) is necessary. Philosophers expressed this idea with the phrase ‘‘man is political by nature’’ ( al-insa ̄n madanı ̄ bi-l-tab c )’ ( al-Muqaddimah : I, 1). Man’s predicate ‘political’ ( madanı ̄ ) was built in Arabic on the word used by Arab translators for polis ( madı ̄nah ), thus marking continuity with the Greek linguistic and philosophical pattern. According to Aristotle, man ( a ‘ nthro ̄pos ) leads by nature a social life, whose typical form is the polis . Hence, the citizen ( polı ‘te ̄s ) – namely, the man who actively takes part in public life by exercising political and judicial functions ( Politics: 1257a, 23-24) – is the human being who fulfills his humanity. Before being a member of the polis , however, man is a member of his family ( oikı ‘a ), a minor social unit that Plato looked at as a hindrance to his perfect city, whereas Aristotle consid- ered it a ‘natural’ form of membership. Aristotle’s main legacy, however, is the identification of the basic co- ordinates of citizenship, placing man at the centre and investigating his relations with the political community. Transcending Plato’s duality, the philosopher pinned down the dependency of the political element from a certain conception of mankind, in his reconciled vision of man, body and soul. Following the developments of citizenship through the ages, evidence can be gathered that major turning points occur pre- cisely when the anthropological model changes; such was the case with the Aristotelian model, a longstanding shared horizon for the Western and Eastern political discourse. In the West, Aristotle profoundly influenced ancient philosophy and later Christian thinkers; through Scholasticism, Aristotle’s conceptions of man and society pervaded the European culture of the Middle Ages and beyond, just when the issues of sovereignty and citizenship were shaping up. Aspects of Aristotle’s thought would continue to appeal to modern philosophy, even when the latter forsook the systemic ideal. In the Arab world, Aristotle is regarded as the uppermost philosopher ever since al-Kindı ̄ (d. 873 AD), and Avveroes (ibn Rushd, d. 1198 AD) defined him as ‘exemplar quod natura invenit ad demonstrandum ulti- mam perfectionem humanam’ ( Commentarium magnum : III, 2, 433). Aristotle is often remembered simply as the Philosopher both by Scho- lastic and Arab scholars; Avveroes declared that Aristotle was his first master, whereas his second master was al-Fa ̄ra ̄bı ̄ (d. 950 AD), author of the Virtuous City inspired by Plato’s Republic The treatise on Politics , however, was not included in the Corpus Aris- totelicum of the Arabs. Avveroes himself, known in the West as Aristo- 18 CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB WORLD tle’s commentator, ignored Aristotle’s Politics and wrote a commentary on Plato’s Republic , just as al-Fa ̄ra ̄bı ̄ did. In the Latin world, too, Aristo- tle’s Politics remained unknown until the second half of the 13th cen- tury, when the two translations attributed to William of Moerbeke ap- peared. Therefore, Aristotle’s political theories influenced the ancient and early medieval world, both Latin and Arab, only in an indirect way, through other writings of the philosopher. Yet, his influence on ancient and modern political theory is not disputed and proves the underlying importance of the conception of man in the development of political thought. Some scholars attribute the eclipse of Politics to its inherent inability to relate to any political entity other than the Greek polis , and the trea- tise sank into oblivion during the Hellenistic period (Viano 2002). It should cause little wonder, if a closer look into Aristotle’s definition is taken; his definition of citizen is firmly and tightly bound to an arche- typal political community that Alexander’s conquests swept away. The political community is the other major coordinate of citizenship. If we represent citizenship as an ellipsoid, the individual and the politi- cal community are its foci, whereas its main intersection points can be expressed in terms of membership, rights, participation or status, var- iously considered from the legal, philosophical, political or sociological planes. When the models of each focus change, the entire figure re- shapes. Classical models and early East-West contacts The relationship between the individual and the political community has been explored everywhere through the ages. However, there are some experiences that have given rise to different models of citizen- ship: above all, the Greek participatory notion and the Roman status structure. The contrasting paradigms of citizenship in classical Greece and republican Rome affected the development of citizenship theories in the West more than in the Eastern world; when the two models were at their apex, contacts with the Arabs were fairly marginal. 1 The situation partly changed when two more stable political entities were established in northern Arabia: the Phylarchy of the Ghassanids and the Kingdom of the Lakhmids, the former in the orbit of the Byzantine Empire, and the latter allied to the Sassanids. At that point (3rd-7th centuries AD), though, the epoch of the Greek poleis and the Roman ci- vitas was long over. In the Eastern Byzantine provinces, neither the Greek nor the Ro- man classical concept of citizenship took root. In the Greek polis , the citizen’s political participation was the cornerstone of city life, but for INTRODUCTION 19 his ecumenical project Alexander preferred the ideal city of Plato’s Re- public to his own tutor’s notion of citizen; thus, Hellenism did not spread the Greek idea of citizenship in terms of rights and duties that the individual had to exercise for the sake of the city. By contrast, the Roman concept of the citizen’s status (entailing full capacity and sub- jection to Roman law) was still alive and well at the time of Rome’s conquest of the eastern territories, but later died down as citizenship was granted to larger sections of the non-Roman population (especially under Caracalla and Justianian). Hence, Hellenism and the Roman Empire presented a fairly composite picture of citizenship to the Ghas- sanids, who were to become members of the important Syrian elite of Islam’s early Umayyad caliphate. As for the Persian Empire, it is quite problematical to define the po- sition of the individual vis-a ‘ -vis authority in the late Sassanid age. The Persian tradition, however, placed the ruler and his rigid class system at the centre; such was most likely the attitude towards the subject that was perceived by the Lakhmids when brought under direct Sassanid control. When Arabs made more direct contacts with Romans and Persians in the 5th and 6th centuries AD, citizenship did not represent or no longer represented the axis of the political discourse for these civilisa- tions. Only after the Arab-Islamic conquest ( al-Fath ) did Arab scholars come across the different conceptualisations of citizenship in the an- cient classics, during the golden age of translations between the 8th and the 10th centuries AD. Greek, Persian and Indian scientific clas- sics were translated and easily taken in by the new, Arabic-speaking culture, but the methods and results of philosophy seemed incompati- ble with the basic tenets of Islam as they were being framed by Muslim theologians and jurists. Greek philosophy, whose texts reached Arab scholars through later, Neoplatonic readings, proved especially thorny for the Muslim intellectual; among the political works, Plato’s dialo- gues abounded, and the Muslim scholar was thus called upon to take uncomfortable positions on irreconcilable conflicts like the one oppos- ing the king-philosopher of Plato’s Republic and the Islamic caliph. Le- gal scholars ( c ulama ̄’ ) took a clear stance on the issue; philosophy could not play any role in an Islamic system and was to be banned from Isla- mic learning institutions, where the study of law had to prevail ( c ilm al-fiqh ). This did not prevent the flourishing of Arab-Islamic philoso- phy; however, it was forced to dwell outside the Islamic curriculum and only indirectly did it influence the religious sciences, which were strongly tied to Islamic law. 2 20 CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB WORLD